by Holger Isenberg » Thu Jun 13, 2024 1:46 am
I propose to
revert the unauthorized name change of the lunar surface feature named today Rainer Gamma done in 1834. Because
originally in 1651 Giovanni Battista Riccioli named it Galilaei to honor Galileo Galilei who died 9 years earlier. In 1834 the original name was moved to a nearby crater due to some formalism as only craters are named and not other visible features, which may have been outside of the contemporary scientific worldview.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reiner_Gamma
The central feature of Reiner Gamma resembles the dipolar formation created by iron filings on a surface with a bar magnet on the underside. Low-orbiting spacecraft have observed a relatively strong magnetic field associated with each of these albedo markings.
In early lunar maps by Francesco Maria Grimaldi, this feature was incorrectly identified as a crater. His colleague Giovanni Riccioli then named it Galilaeus, after Galileo Galilei. The name was later transferred northwest to the current crater Galilaei.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reiner_(crater)
Reiner is a crater of Eratosthenian age.[1] It is named after the astronomer Vincentio Reinieri, a disciple of Galileo Galilei.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galilaei_(lunar_crater)
Initially, the name Galilaeus had been applied by Giovanni Battista Riccioli, an Italian Jesuit who produced one of the first detailed maps of the Moon in 1651, to a large and bright nearby albedo feature (now known as Reiner Gamma). The name was transferred to its present location by Johann Heinrich Mädler in his influential Mappa Selenographica, published in collaboration with Wilhelm Beer in four parts between 1834 and 1836. Mädler's motive for this change was the fact that his lunar map did not name albedo features, forcing him to transfer Galileo's name to an insignificant nearby crater.
further references:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galilaei_(lunar_crater)
https://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/Feature/4987
Named Lunar Formations by Percy Lund Humpharies, 1935:
https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dl ... 5/mode/2up
p70: 1835 Reiner C (gamma?) -780, 61 Diam.4 Sa.No 12 Fr.No 755 Authority: Mädler
p195: Reiner 1832 Map 11
my original proposal from earlier today:
https://x.com/areoinfo/status/1801007359206253052
I propose to [b]revert the unauthorized name change of the lunar surface feature named today Rainer Gamma[/b] done in 1834. Because [b]originally in 1651 Giovanni Battista Riccioli named it Galilaei[/b] to honor Galileo Galilei who died 9 years earlier. In 1834 the original name was moved to a nearby crater due to some formalism as only craters are named and not other visible features, which may have been outside of the contemporary scientific worldview.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reiner_Gamma
The central feature of Reiner Gamma resembles the dipolar formation created by iron filings on a surface with a bar magnet on the underside. Low-orbiting spacecraft have observed a relatively strong magnetic field associated with each of these albedo markings.
In early lunar maps by Francesco Maria Grimaldi, this feature was incorrectly identified as a crater. His colleague Giovanni Riccioli then named it Galilaeus, after Galileo Galilei. The name was later transferred northwest to the current crater Galilaei.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reiner_(crater)
Reiner is a crater of Eratosthenian age.[1] It is named after the astronomer Vincentio Reinieri, a disciple of Galileo Galilei.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galilaei_(lunar_crater)
Initially, the name Galilaeus had been applied by Giovanni Battista Riccioli, an Italian Jesuit who produced one of the first detailed maps of the Moon in 1651, to a large and bright nearby albedo feature (now known as Reiner Gamma). The name was transferred to its present location by Johann Heinrich Mädler in his influential Mappa Selenographica, published in collaboration with Wilhelm Beer in four parts between 1834 and 1836. Mädler's motive for this change was the fact that his lunar map did not name albedo features, forcing him to transfer Galileo's name to an insignificant nearby crater.
further references:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galilaei_(lunar_crater)
https://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/Feature/4987
Named Lunar Formations by Percy Lund Humpharies, 1935: https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.177494/page/n95/mode/2up
p70: 1835 Reiner C (gamma?) -780, 61 Diam.4 Sa.No 12 Fr.No 755 Authority: Mädler
p195: Reiner 1832 Map 11
my original proposal from earlier today: https://x.com/areoinfo/status/1801007359206253052